NSW Police accused of cover-up after 95-year-old was tasered at aged care home

NSW Police is accused of a cover-up after documents revealed mentions of paramedics, a knife and a Taser were removed in their first statement about their fatal stunning of a 95-year-old great-grandmother.

Clare Nowland was tasered during a confrontation with police while walking with a frame and holding a steak knife at the Yallambee Lodge in Cooma on May 17.

The mother-of-eight, who had dementia, died a week later in hospital.

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A 71-word press release, approved by Police Commissioner Karen Webb, was issued 12 hours after Nowland was injured but provided little detail about her “interaction with police”.

“No further details are available at this time,” it said.

But documents obtained by AAP under Freedom of Information laws reveal the statement was published after police slashed a much-longer draft that included several key details, including the use of the Taser.

The 171-word draft prepared by the NSW Police Media Unit outlined how police responded at 4.15am to reports that an aged care home resident had a knife and found a woman “still armed … in a small room”.

Clare Nowland died days after being tasered by police. Credit: 7NEWS

“Police and paramedics attempted to speak to the woman. However, all instructions were ignored,” it said.

“When she stood up and moved towards officers, a Taser was deployed by a constable.”

The draft noted the woman was treated by paramedics at the scene and left space for her latest hospital condition to be included.

The published statement omitted both details, stating her condition was “being monitored” in hospital.

The mention of the officer’s job being placed under review was also removed.

Nowland was unnamed in both versions, as per standard police procedure.

Police did not publicly comment on the incident again until after multiple media reports emerged more than 36 hours after the tasering.

NSW Police Commissioner Karen Webb defended omitting mention in a press statement that a 95-year-old woman was tasered. Credit: AAP

In an extraordinary press conference on May 19, Assistant Commissioner Peter Cotter detailed how Nowland had a serrated steak knife in a small treatment room when she moved slowly towards officers and was tasered.

“She had a walking frame but she had a knife,” he said.

Webb later defended the decision to omit mention of the Taser in the first press release, of which she had oversight.

“It was important the family was informed of the situation in a factual matter before we went public on it,” she told Sydney radio 2GB on May 22.

“That’s very necessary and I’m sure that family appreciates that now.”

She denied police were hiding anything, saying the Nowland family deserved to learn about the incident via police, not media reports.

Police officer Kristian White was charged over the incident. Credit: 7NEWS

In NSW Parliament, former police minister Paul Toole said police had covered up the taser use and urged his successor to take action.

Police Minister Yasmin Catley said she was not aware of the draft press release and urged MPs to think of the Nowland family.

“The opposition should take it to (police watchdog) LECC,” she told Question Time on Wednesday.

Nowland’s death sparked calls for better independent police oversight and the release of the police body camera footage.

Federal Aged Care Minister Anika Wells mentioned Nowland to reinforce the need for a greater understanding of and support for people living with dementia.

The officer who fired the stun weapon has since been suspended with pay and charged with three offences, including recklessly causing grievous bodily harm.

Senior Constable Kristian White, 33, will appear in a Cooma court on July 5.

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